Perhaps my experiences are unique, but in the 10 or so years I've been working with and around java development what I've seen is that java permits mediocre developers to produce complex software that's inefficient and badly abstracted, that does complex things slowly.

Furthermore, the little third world walled garden that java puts these developers in isolates and insulates them from the systems they are impacting.

That's my honest experience. Java developers of all the languages I've had to support on average have been the least skilled and least - I don't even know. It's hard to even qualify. Other developers take an interest in systems issues and work to improve it. Working with java developers is often like working with ducks. You can explain things over and over, and in the end unless you fix it from a systems perspective, nothing is going to get done because they don't understand or don't care.

To me, java was designed for one thing which makes a moderate amount of sense. A platform that is global. It isn't that, because java on each platform is fundamentally different due to the libraries involved, but furthermore it's a terrible fit for most of things I've seen people do with it.

The current direction of mainstream Linux is so horrible that an open source windows could overtake it.

Config files that cannot be easily maintained, degraded modes that don't work properly, serviceability issues, binary log files that can only be consumed when the system has lib mounted (can't be read with/sbin) - it all points to a system being developed by non-sysadmins, which is exactly the reason that _we_ invented linux and the associated libraries in the first place.

Congratulations next-gen linux devs. You're basically rewriting solaris 3, which we abandoned in favor of lighter, better, simpler and more reliable. I can see the future, you'll be abandoned too.

...was in not publishing those policies to the hackers that got in earlier. If only they had known that there was a company policy against it, it could have saved everyone a lot of extra work.

All things considered though, this arrogance seems in line with a place who doesn't know their own vulnerabilities. I'd wager this isn't the first time they have been compromised and this is just defensive turtling to try to hide facts.

I guess the waves of less technically apt engineers is driving the project now. Congrats, you've turned linux into something I wouldn't move to from Solaris because it actually sucks the same or worse.

Just like I feel that it's crucial to teach a new driver how to drive a stick, I feel it's crucial to start a programmer on the most basic and fundamental logic and understand what goes into an instruction.

I have seen and endured grotesque inefficiencies that were a result of an abstraction layered on abstraction, in a virtualized sandbox (java usually), running on virtualized/abstracted hardware.

Lower level design and programming is not more 'complex' - it's more precise. While it could be argued that there is a time and a place for training wheels. we also understand with training wheels that they have to come off someday so that the rider can actually 'ride', It seems like all we do in the tech world is make training wheels for training wheels anymore

H1-B workers are a corporate dream. They are basically indentured servants, who are often brought over on a 'contract', for which they sign and are expected to take an subaverage pay rate for a duration in exchange for H1-B sponsorship. This is a huge boon to the employer because the worker is in a compromised position and is bound to maintain the position or lose sponsorship and opportunity for further sponsorship.

Without appearing too radical in my position, this really was quite literally the foundation behind indentured servitude in this country in the late 1700s. Individuals would agree to a contract and buy passage to the new world on their contract labor.

Conditions have changed, but this is what business will always seek - leverage. I could not accurately recount the number of times I have seen h1-b postings that were fraudulent. Postings that claimed that there was 'no available talent.' If they would be honest and say "no available talent willing to work for 60% market rate", then at least it would be honest.

We're spending science mind power, money and time researching a way to make a drug that replaces a persons weakness of character and lack of willpower. If you want to stop smoking, just stop. Don't buy cigarettes.

I feel that our culture is sliding away from any concept of holding people personally responsible for their own choices. If a person smokes, overeats, under-exercises - those are their choices. They must be held accountable.

There are kitchens to be staffed, trash cans to be emptied and phones to be answered. All of those things require highly talented individuals who are going to be paying off student debt for eternity making low wages.

Joking aside, the degree matters a lot less or not at all when I hire people. What I am looking for is the ability to think which is unrelated to school and in many cases, counter to it.

Just so this is perfectly clear - I am an 'un-charged criminal', and so are you. What this is proposing is that the basis of innocent until proven guilty, the freedom from undue search and or seizure, which I am quite sure would have included having armed men follow one around observing them at all times, are all guarantees that we have but are not demanding from our own constitution.

What threat is so great that we accept these conditions? What threat is greater than tyranny and secrecy?

Considering the degree to which citizens are recorded and their activities surveilled, it is paramount that the same scrutiny be applied to those who wield deadly force on behalf of an ever more secretive and grasping authority not to mention the marked increase in aggression from authority and the militarization of police forces.

I was moving out of my house and needed to cancel cable service. I called them, and was put on hold and transferred around and spent no less than 45 minutes trying to get ahold of the right person to cancel my account and was disconnected twice.

In complete frustration, I transferred my cable bill to a separate credit card and cancelled that card. It was all I could do to get rid of comcast without another hour on the phone that I didn't have while packing the house and getting everything ready to go.

This article feels a little egoistic. The author is saying "Only special people.. like me."

Are also excluded from professional basketball, being CEOs and astronauts. Anywhere that there is competition, there will be emergence of traits that are dominant for that domain. It's not little league. Not everyone is a winner.